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-PAGE THREE-
Coach Hill Wekomes Gridders Back
Tro
_PAGE FOUR -
Dr. Laidler to Speak On Democracy
Vol. XLIII
72
Los Angeles, Calif., Thursday, Nov. 15, 1951
No. 43
Vorld News
DT Staffers Desert Duties For Field Trip
Readers of the Santa Paula Chronicle will pet a pleasant surprise come Frdav afternoon.
Their daily newspaper will have been written and edited by nine Daily Trojan staff members who leave tomorrow for the walnut-raising community.
DT Editor Bob Erburu will edit the paper.
Joe Digles will be sports editor, assisted by Earl O’Bar. and Beverly Chilson and Janet MacLeod will handle society news.
Reporters will be Shirley Ickes, Alice Katem, Charles Lahey, and Jack Miiler.
Fred C. Coonradt, assistant professor of journalism, is directing the Santa Paula crew, while Mrs. FUzaneth H. Jones, assistant professor of journalism, will take a crew to put out the Riverside Press on Dec. 7.
Faculty night will be held tonight by the Crescent Theater group when its members present "Biography,” by S. N. Behrman. at 8 in the student lounge with members of the SC faculty as guests.
The question of whether or not Marion Frude, internationally famous woman artist, should reveal I her past life and amours in print
From the C'nited Press
The Allied high command has •ccused the Communists of massacring at least 5660 American war prisoners in Korea while running up “a record for killings and barbarism unique even in the Communist world.” An incomplete list of Chinese and North Korean atrocities shows 12.790 Allied captives j slain ruthlessly in violation of the Geneva convention on treatment of j prisoners of war. Korean civilians slaughtered in wholesale Red atrocities were estimated at upward of 250 000.
• • •
Gov. Earl Warren of California has announced his candidacy for the Republican nomination for president in 1952. Warren. GOP vice-presidential standard-bearer In 1948. becomes the second candidate for the Republican nomination. Sen. Robert A. Taft of Ohio announced his candidacy one month ago. Warren said he would permit a group of top-ranking Republican leaders in the state to submit his name in the California presidential primary but would wait until the “proper season” to decide whether to urge his candidacy in other states.
• • *
The United States and Yugoslavia have signed a military aid agreement, and defense officials have stated that heavy arms shipments to Marshal Tito's anti-Soviet forces should get underway “quite promptly.” The arms is designed to bolster Tito in his lengthy cold-war battle against his Soviet-supported neigh- I bors and to assure that he will be i on the side of the free world in case of war with Russia.
• • •
Labor leader Dave Beck and Democratic Congressman Hugh B.
Mitchell have accused Gen. Douglas MacArthur of “subverting”
Seattle’s 100th birthday celebration after hearing the general speak Tuesday night. MacArthur charged this nation's leadership with “diplomatic blunders abroad and spendthrift aims at home.” |
Mitchell said he was sure the general had offered himself as a Republican presidential candidate.
Berk, national executive vice-president of the Teamsters union, said MacArthur was a “hell of a fine soldier but a much better soldier than a politician."
• • .•
Angry Congressmen are demand-ing that the United States drop the atomic bomb on Communist troops at gate 31 of the Coliseum to rein Korea and break off truce nego- align the card holders used during tiations with the “barbarc" Reds the halftime card stunts, in retaliation for newly-disclosed Members are to bring hammers, enemy atrocities. Officials of the screw drivers, and small nails, executive department also have Bob Flandrick. card stunt chair-warned that there will be a ‘'reckon- man. said the Squires hope to in-ing” if the North Koreans and sure better card stunts in the fu-Chinese communists fail to account ture through proper alignment of for all UN prisoners. i the holders.
Drivers Needed In Turkey Day Transport Pool
Out-of-town students whetting their appetites ior a helping of that home-cooked turkey, may apply for a ride home by signing up for the Thanksgiving day car pool in the student lounge, third flooi Student Union.
Mrs. Bernice Tiegs. lounge hostess. is handling applications for riders and drivers. The pool applications are expected to include an area from the coast to Arizona and north to Utah.
“Requests have been received for rides only so far,” Mrs. Tiegs said. “We hope to see a large registration of drivers to accommodate riders’ applications.”
Deadline for registration is Wed-neciay. Applications will be accepted from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. daily.
Most students are expected to leave r.feer Wednesday classes. Definite trip arrangements, however. will be made between the individual applicants.
Senate Slaps Fines On Frosh Candidates
by Chuck Sweet
The ASSC Senate, acting on recommendations of the Elections Investigating committee, slapped fines totaling $32.50 last night on candidates in the recent freshman election.
A motion that the fines be suspended was beaten by a voice vote. John F. Bradley, reporting for the investigating committee, said the penalties will be collected by Dr. Alex Aloia, student activities adviser at a date to be announced.
CTG to Host Faculty At Biography Tonight
LILLIAN STEUBER and Ingolf Dahl, associate professors of music, and John Crown, head of the piano department (left to right) look over the music that Crown will play at his piano recital in Bovard auditorium Sunday evening.
Crown To Play Work Of Fellow Professor
The piano concert Sunday eve- [ tory, Frankfurt and the State Aca-ning by John Crown, head of the j demy of Music, Vienna. He was a piano department, will give the student of Moriz Rosenthal and
Eduard Jung.
and thus ruin the chances of her first suitor, politician Ler.nder Nolan. will be decided for faculty members attending.
Complications in deciding the issue are introduced when Miss Frude falls in love with the magazine editor who intends to publish her recollections.
Playing the role of Miss Frude I is Virginia Reck, while John Man-| love portrays the politician and | Jim Norcop. the editor. Harold Rei-j fer* Sue Brown. Maynard Smith, i and Hannelore Hahn complete the | cast. . _
, , Central staging will be used, fol-
Plenty of fun and relaxation is , *
. J . lowing the name of the group pro-
Ys Plan For Holiday Hop
i artist a crack at the work of a j 1 fellow SC professor before the New York Philharmonic gets hold of it.
The professor is Leon Kirchner, j assistant professor of music; the work is his Piano Sonata, 1948.
Crown will perform the work at iiis concert in Bovard auditorium 1 nirturp work at 8:30. The New York Philhar- P | monic will do it sometime in January. and Leonard Bernstein will | conduct the Boston Symphony per- I formance of it next summer.
In addition to Lhe Kirchner so- j nata. Crown will play Variations | benstein’s visit, in F Minor, Haydn; Sonata in F--
promised for collegians at the tree stag or drag "Levi hop” to be sponsored by the YMCA and er
YWCA tomorrow from 8 p.m. to midnight.
Held at the new YWCA building at Hoover street and 38th place, the dance will have a Thanksgiving theme and feature both social and square dancing.
Hay, corn stalks, pumpkins, and ears of corn will decorate the hall, co-chairmen Jim Dryden and Rae Olson said.
A group of 5- and 6-year-old professional square dancers will | perform under Jan Harris, co-di- | rector of the University Recreation j association.
An informal event, the men will j wear Levis and plaid shirts, and j women, square dance dresses.
Doughnuts and cider will be served.
ducing the play—the Crescent group. In central staging, the audience is seated completely around the stage and the actors use the aisles to exit and enter.
Two additional performances have been set for tomorrow and Saturday nights at 8. Tickets to the play may be obtained for 50 cents at the door.
Soonsored by the University Recreation association, the “theater for fun” CTG players have presented 11 plays in the last two years, including “Measure for Measure,” “The Little Foxes,” and “Arsenic and Old Lace.”
Norcop is producer-director for the event and Miss Hahn is technical adviser.
Law School To Hold Dance, Golf Tourney
The semi-annual Law School day featuring a golf tournament and a dance will be held tomorrow.
Tee-off time for the golf tournament at the Baldwin Hills golf course will be at 1 p.m.
Several trophies will be awarded to the lowest scorers among the students, faculty, alumni, and fraternity teams. Clown trophies will also be presented to the highest scorers among the students and the faculty.
More than 35 members of the law school have registered for the nine-hole tournament.
Following the golf tournament and a sensitive ensemble player. be the dance at the Elks club.
In addition to concert work he has 607 ^kview avenue, at 9 p.m.
Prizes will be given at the dance, made recordings and done motion La Veme Boyer and ^ orchestra
I will play.
After a performance in Australia The Law School day, a tradition
in the School of Law, was renewed last year after an absence of several years.
Crown has been commended for his work both as a brilliant soloist
KEN KRUGER’
. . accepts gavel
the Sydney Morning Herald wrote . . For sheer brilliance and command of the instrument, this was the best piece of piano playing Sydney has heard since Artur Ru-
ISC Names Grid Winner
Sharp Minor, Schumann; and "Valse Oubliee” and Sixth Hungarian Rhapsody, Liszt.
Admission to the concert is free.
Members of the School of Music concert course and holders of the $5 concert books will be admitted early, and doors will open to the public at 8:15.
Crown is holder of the diploma up honors were shared by of the International Competition Adams and J. R. Smith.
Student council
Ball and Chain Elects Kruger
Ken Kruger was elected presi-1 dent of Ball and Chain, honorary j junior-senior athletic managers or- j ganization, Tuesday evening.
Other officers elected were Bob Grisson, vice-president; Bill Rowley, secretary; and Jim Bowen, treasurer.
Kruger, a senior, has taken part in many activities on campua. He | has been a Squire, Architectural Mrs. Edwarda White, counselor vice-president. Ball and Chain vice-
Secretaries Plan Lunch
of women, will be the honored guest of Sigma Alpha Sigma, secretarial administration sorority, at
prssident, and currently is a member of the Knights.
Independent
football contest winner of last a luncheon today in the Univer -week tfas Bob Holtzman. Runner- ! sity Commons dining rooms B and
C. J. C from 12 to 1.
The luncheon is under the
for Pianists, which was held in Vi- The $5 merchandise order at the auspices of Mrs. Ruth Toothaker. enna. He received the award in Student Union bookstore will be j “All secretarial administration 1933; it had never before been awarded to Holtzman at the IFC and business education majors are bestowed on an American pianist, meeting at noon today, 418 Student j invited,” said Dorothy Fucci, vice-He studied at Hock’s conserva- ! Union. president of the Organization.
Croup Considers Trolios Protests; No Action Taken
If payment is not forthcoming, students’ grades will be withheld until the fines are taken care of, he said.
Senior Class President Stan Tomlinson moved that the fine* be suspended on the grounds that the “freshmen didn’t know what they were doing.”
Token Fines Senator Bradley said that the fines are only a token of the authority of the investigating committee to regulate campaign procedure and that no assessment was more than 55.
Fines were levied for poster violations, illegal parades, failure to turn in financial reports, and late financial reports. A candidate was also cited for violation of articles 4 and 7 of the elections code.
Earlier Elections Commissioner Jim Schuck proposed that in coming freshman elections an election assembly be held and that the period of voting during election days be cut from seven to five hours.
Put It In Writing Bradley, concluding his report, urged that reports of campaign expenditures be submitted on a standardized form and that copies of campaign rules be attached to petitions for offices.
The Senate ratified the election of Fred Moldenhauer as Freshman class president and Sydne Moore as vice-president. Moldenhauer took his place as a voting senator.
Larry Spector, Greater University committee chairman, reported that an SC athletic blanket will be [ presented to Owen R. Bird, a per-i ennial Trooan rooter, who coined the nickname “Trojans” when working as a sportswriter on the Los Angeles Times in 1912.
Health Plan Duplicate Spector reported his committee's rejection of a proposed health plan for SC students on the grounds that it duplicated the present health service program.
Other plans on the fire with Greater-U include investigation of a new humor magazine, distribution of next year’s student handbook.
No action regarding protests investigating of cheating and pro-
oinef ollarrorl ’ Q/*tc in ______*
Chemistry, Dental Buildings To Be Completed by Spring
Squires to Reset Card Holders
Anderson to Give Near East Talk
Headlines” coffee hour series.
The series explores current events in various parts of the globe. Discussions regarding the South American and domestic scenes are 'planned for future meetings.
The series will be held in Hillel house. 1029 West S6t.h street.
Winners of the Loveliest Lux Girl contest will be presented tonight by Mona Freeman. Paramount star, at an invitational dinner at the Town House at 6:30.
All 17 contestants will attend the dinner wearing corsages prepared by Ad-Mont Florists, one of the merchants cooperating in the contest. The three winners also will receive special floral arrangements.
Besides receiving other prizes, the three winners also will be honored guests of the Hollywood stars appearing on the Lux Radio Theater program next Monday night.
Various members of the faculty and officials at Paramount studio also, have been invited to the dinner . Photographers and reporters from metropolitan newspapers will cover the event.
Lux wrappers were counted by the Los Angeles Shrine organization which will donate its fee to
Construction of the new chemistry and School of Dentistry buildings, part of SC's expansion program will reach completion by Dec. 1 and early spring C. Raim-Dr. Totton Anderson, associate | ond Johnson, university architect, professor of political science, will j said yesterday.
1 speak at 12:15 today on “Power j -phe two-story organic chemistry Tu! ™ . P’m’ Politics in the Near East’’ as Part °* teaching and research building
^ ...... the Hmel foundation>s “Behind the wm f^nt on West 36th place. Half
of the 12,000 square foot structure is being equipped at present.
Science Extension An extension of the north wing of Science hall, connected to the Science building between the first and second floors, this building will provide improved conditions for student chemists.
These improvements will include | hoods and sinks located next to j the working space of the student, permanent mounting stands for | the purpose of setting up experiments (these will replace the ring stands which are now being used), and 18 research and instructional laboratories.
The first floor will contain four laboratories—three large ones for undergraduates and one for advanced students. A preparation
room will be adjacent to the lat- ! will line the north side of the ter. For storage, there will be a chemistry building, stock room for chemicals and ap- The School of Dentistry build-paratus. i ing on the northwest corner of
More Labs Hoover and 34th streets is half-
Fourteen laboratories and four completed, faculty offices, a research room, a
against alleged “off-color ’ acts in list Thursday's Trolios show has been taken by the student activities committee, it was announced yesterday.
The committee met yesterday afternoon and considered possible action. Several students concerned with the production, a combined
posals for an “honor system,' possible class counqil exchanges between SC and UCLA, and improved high school day and frosh orientation program^.
‘Fight On’ For Decca The move to record SC songpt was given added support by the Senate. Vick Knight, LAS council
student and professional variety | president, moved approval of the show, met with the committee bat original proposal by Paul Parrisb
no names were given out.
‘ We have taken no action regarding Trolios as yet,” said Bernard L. Hyink, dean of students.
Judges All Set to Come Clean ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ Name Lux Girl Winners Tonight
micro-analytical laboratory, and two rooms for special research apparatus will be on the second floor. A hydrogeneration house, where inflammable gas may be handled safely under pressure greater than 1000 pounds, will be located on the roof of the building. Experiments here will be directed by remote control behind the protection of extra thick walls.
Adequate lighting will be provided by solid rows of windows which | of 400 students,
54- Spanish Records
Moves Uptown
The present home of the year-old School of Dentistry,, the , largest in the West, is located at | Q FeatUTe Meet 16th and Los Angeles streets in
metropolitan Los Angeles, where it Spanish records will be played was established in 1914. at today s La Tertulia Pan-Ameri-
The ground floor of the new cana meeting at 3:30 in the Inter-$1,155,000 structure will provide national student lounge, more space than the present en- j The recordings are from the tire three-story downtown clinic1 collection of Mrs. Helen Sanz of building. There will be sufficient the Spanish department, facilities to take care of the needs Interested students are welcome.
Refreshments will be served.
and Jim Eddy that the Trojan Band record a record or album ox records.
Jack Crawford amended the motion, adding that the profits derived from the sale of the records should go toward sending the band east with the football team.
The Senate okayed a resolution that cases of vandalism at UCLA by SC students be dealt with by the Men's or Women's Judicial court.
Recognition was given to th« Zoology club as an .approved campus organization. Darleen Farrell presented the motion for the Student Organizations committee 21 the absence of Gene Royer.
LAS Panel Discusses Science and Politics
n
MONA FREEMAN . . . crowns queen
their new Crippled Children's hospital in Los Angeles which is nearing completion.
Allen A. Arthur. Lever Brothers campus representative for the campaign, said Lever Brothers company considered the campaign highly successful.
El Rodeo
Portraits
Seniors may now make appointments to have pictures taken for the El Rodeo next week (Nov. 19 through 21).
Delta Sigma Delta. Xi Psi Phi, Alpha Omega, and Psi Omega, should make appointments to have their pictures taken on Saturday, Nov. 1".
by Sandy Bothman
Scientific technology and its relation to political democracy was the LAS lecture pansl subject discussed yesterday afternoon in Doheny Library auditorium by Dr. room and balance and instrument Sidney W. Benson, professor of
! chemistry; Dr. Harry J. Deuel, dean of the Graduate School; and Dr. Leon A. Henkin, professor of mathematics.
Dr. Benson, using the aspect of governmental control and scientific research, illustrated that there can be technological progress under other conditions than freedom, but freedom has a proportional influence on the rate and fertility of scientific development.
Science and Food Dr. Deuel presented the results
CraduateStudents Faculty to Meet For Java Session
Today's edition of the graduate school's weekly coffee hour will feature coffee, donuts, and plenty of conver sation at 3 in the second-floor dining room of the Commons.
The social get-togethers, fast becoming an established institution [ that scientific technology has hr.d after its initial success last year, are held for the purpose of creat- of food, in the improvement of ing closer relations among gradu- health standards, and how these ate students and between students ! go together to strengthen democ-and faculty. ! racy.
This afternoon's affair will be Dr. Henkin illustrated historically sponsored by the department of how scientific technology has helped biochemistry. A different group to foster and hinder democratic sponsors the coffee hour each week. ^ improvement.
“Science is neither a source of j governmental influence on science, good nor evil. The moral balance | he pointed out that before the last of science can be calculated only | war there was an important psy-at great risk.” he said. I choiogical motivation for men to
Dr. Henkin said. “Perhaps we 1 go into science. Instead of money, could use scientific investigation to it offered great intellectual activity test the moral values of science.’’ and freedom to explore truth 1 0f stopping scientific research and On the asset side of the scien- : wherever the scientist might find it. being content with what we have, tific ledger, he showed that science He sr.id that today therfe is a or Benson pointed out that a very has given us more time to indulge serious problem because certain serious problem would result with in political activity, thus giving us governmental restrictions are thu idea, a broader base of informed citi- ' shackling the freedom of science, zens. Science has helped the rise which could result in elimination to nationalism by making it pos- <JT the psychological incentive to sible to discover new lands, in- i go into science. The great discov-
a logical conclusion, these policies can do nothing but harm,” Benson said.
Since men have seen the destructive potential of atomic energy, there has been some thought
“Wc are the masters as well as | the slaves of our inventions, such I as television and refrigerators.
mmm Since raw materials are not including America, and provided bet- , enes in this field have been made | exhaustible> some day there may
be no more. Science may develop
ter communication and transpor tation for more efficient central ized governmental control.
Science Defects
by a few geniuses, and if the number of men who go into research decreases, “there is a probability that scientific process will die of
Some of the defects of science \ inner sterility, have been the increasing govern-
in providing abundance and quality menta) control necessary to cope
with the large industrial organizations, national rivalry for raw goods and markets, and an immense standardization which can
a solution—certainly legislation won’t,” he said.
Food Improvements Russian Control Dr Deuel showed how improve-
He said thr.t in Russia, the Po- ments in the food productivity, by litburo is the final authority that scientific technology, has improved sanctions scientific theories. They I our democracy. This has been done have accepted Lycenko s genetic tjy improving strains of crops, de-
.. .. th'oruy and proW““d/11 "T”? i velopmg lertiliz»rs. and invention*
be seen through the displacement j which is not in accordance with it.
of small newspapers by the largely “They have banned the theory of mechanical farm equipment. We circulated dailies. of relativity which is essential in also 1156 fo°d preservatives to pro-
In Dr. Benson’s talk on t h e nuclear physics, and if earned to j tect what food we teivA,

-PAGE THREE-
Coach Hill Wekomes Gridders Back
Tro
_PAGE FOUR -
Dr. Laidler to Speak On Democracy
Vol. XLIII
72
Los Angeles, Calif., Thursday, Nov. 15, 1951
No. 43
Vorld News
DT Staffers Desert Duties For Field Trip
Readers of the Santa Paula Chronicle will pet a pleasant surprise come Frdav afternoon.
Their daily newspaper will have been written and edited by nine Daily Trojan staff members who leave tomorrow for the walnut-raising community.
DT Editor Bob Erburu will edit the paper.
Joe Digles will be sports editor, assisted by Earl O’Bar. and Beverly Chilson and Janet MacLeod will handle society news.
Reporters will be Shirley Ickes, Alice Katem, Charles Lahey, and Jack Miiler.
Fred C. Coonradt, assistant professor of journalism, is directing the Santa Paula crew, while Mrs. FUzaneth H. Jones, assistant professor of journalism, will take a crew to put out the Riverside Press on Dec. 7.
Faculty night will be held tonight by the Crescent Theater group when its members present "Biography,” by S. N. Behrman. at 8 in the student lounge with members of the SC faculty as guests.
The question of whether or not Marion Frude, internationally famous woman artist, should reveal I her past life and amours in print
From the C'nited Press
The Allied high command has •ccused the Communists of massacring at least 5660 American war prisoners in Korea while running up “a record for killings and barbarism unique even in the Communist world.” An incomplete list of Chinese and North Korean atrocities shows 12.790 Allied captives j slain ruthlessly in violation of the Geneva convention on treatment of j prisoners of war. Korean civilians slaughtered in wholesale Red atrocities were estimated at upward of 250 000.
• • •
Gov. Earl Warren of California has announced his candidacy for the Republican nomination for president in 1952. Warren. GOP vice-presidential standard-bearer In 1948. becomes the second candidate for the Republican nomination. Sen. Robert A. Taft of Ohio announced his candidacy one month ago. Warren said he would permit a group of top-ranking Republican leaders in the state to submit his name in the California presidential primary but would wait until the “proper season” to decide whether to urge his candidacy in other states.
• • *
The United States and Yugoslavia have signed a military aid agreement, and defense officials have stated that heavy arms shipments to Marshal Tito's anti-Soviet forces should get underway “quite promptly.” The arms is designed to bolster Tito in his lengthy cold-war battle against his Soviet-supported neigh- I bors and to assure that he will be i on the side of the free world in case of war with Russia.
• • •
Labor leader Dave Beck and Democratic Congressman Hugh B.
Mitchell have accused Gen. Douglas MacArthur of “subverting”
Seattle’s 100th birthday celebration after hearing the general speak Tuesday night. MacArthur charged this nation's leadership with “diplomatic blunders abroad and spendthrift aims at home.” |
Mitchell said he was sure the general had offered himself as a Republican presidential candidate.
Berk, national executive vice-president of the Teamsters union, said MacArthur was a “hell of a fine soldier but a much better soldier than a politician."
• • .•
Angry Congressmen are demand-ing that the United States drop the atomic bomb on Communist troops at gate 31 of the Coliseum to rein Korea and break off truce nego- align the card holders used during tiations with the “barbarc" Reds the halftime card stunts, in retaliation for newly-disclosed Members are to bring hammers, enemy atrocities. Officials of the screw drivers, and small nails, executive department also have Bob Flandrick. card stunt chair-warned that there will be a ‘'reckon- man. said the Squires hope to in-ing” if the North Koreans and sure better card stunts in the fu-Chinese communists fail to account ture through proper alignment of for all UN prisoners. i the holders.
Drivers Needed In Turkey Day Transport Pool
Out-of-town students whetting their appetites ior a helping of that home-cooked turkey, may apply for a ride home by signing up for the Thanksgiving day car pool in the student lounge, third flooi Student Union.
Mrs. Bernice Tiegs. lounge hostess. is handling applications for riders and drivers. The pool applications are expected to include an area from the coast to Arizona and north to Utah.
“Requests have been received for rides only so far,” Mrs. Tiegs said. “We hope to see a large registration of drivers to accommodate riders’ applications.”
Deadline for registration is Wed-neciay. Applications will be accepted from 9 a.m. to 9 p.m. daily.
Most students are expected to leave r.feer Wednesday classes. Definite trip arrangements, however. will be made between the individual applicants.
Senate Slaps Fines On Frosh Candidates
by Chuck Sweet
The ASSC Senate, acting on recommendations of the Elections Investigating committee, slapped fines totaling $32.50 last night on candidates in the recent freshman election.
A motion that the fines be suspended was beaten by a voice vote. John F. Bradley, reporting for the investigating committee, said the penalties will be collected by Dr. Alex Aloia, student activities adviser at a date to be announced.
CTG to Host Faculty At Biography Tonight
LILLIAN STEUBER and Ingolf Dahl, associate professors of music, and John Crown, head of the piano department (left to right) look over the music that Crown will play at his piano recital in Bovard auditorium Sunday evening.
Crown To Play Work Of Fellow Professor
The piano concert Sunday eve- [ tory, Frankfurt and the State Aca-ning by John Crown, head of the j demy of Music, Vienna. He was a piano department, will give the student of Moriz Rosenthal and
Eduard Jung.
and thus ruin the chances of her first suitor, politician Ler.nder Nolan. will be decided for faculty members attending.
Complications in deciding the issue are introduced when Miss Frude falls in love with the magazine editor who intends to publish her recollections.
Playing the role of Miss Frude I is Virginia Reck, while John Man-| love portrays the politician and | Jim Norcop. the editor. Harold Rei-j fer* Sue Brown. Maynard Smith, i and Hannelore Hahn complete the | cast. . _
, , Central staging will be used, fol-
Plenty of fun and relaxation is , *
. J . lowing the name of the group pro-
Ys Plan For Holiday Hop
i artist a crack at the work of a j 1 fellow SC professor before the New York Philharmonic gets hold of it.
The professor is Leon Kirchner, j assistant professor of music; the work is his Piano Sonata, 1948.
Crown will perform the work at iiis concert in Bovard auditorium 1 nirturp work at 8:30. The New York Philhar- P | monic will do it sometime in January. and Leonard Bernstein will | conduct the Boston Symphony per- I formance of it next summer.
In addition to Lhe Kirchner so- j nata. Crown will play Variations | benstein’s visit, in F Minor, Haydn; Sonata in F--
promised for collegians at the tree stag or drag "Levi hop” to be sponsored by the YMCA and er
YWCA tomorrow from 8 p.m. to midnight.
Held at the new YWCA building at Hoover street and 38th place, the dance will have a Thanksgiving theme and feature both social and square dancing.
Hay, corn stalks, pumpkins, and ears of corn will decorate the hall, co-chairmen Jim Dryden and Rae Olson said.
A group of 5- and 6-year-old professional square dancers will | perform under Jan Harris, co-di- | rector of the University Recreation j association.
An informal event, the men will j wear Levis and plaid shirts, and j women, square dance dresses.
Doughnuts and cider will be served.
ducing the play—the Crescent group. In central staging, the audience is seated completely around the stage and the actors use the aisles to exit and enter.
Two additional performances have been set for tomorrow and Saturday nights at 8. Tickets to the play may be obtained for 50 cents at the door.
Soonsored by the University Recreation association, the “theater for fun” CTG players have presented 11 plays in the last two years, including “Measure for Measure,” “The Little Foxes,” and “Arsenic and Old Lace.”
Norcop is producer-director for the event and Miss Hahn is technical adviser.
Law School To Hold Dance, Golf Tourney
The semi-annual Law School day featuring a golf tournament and a dance will be held tomorrow.
Tee-off time for the golf tournament at the Baldwin Hills golf course will be at 1 p.m.
Several trophies will be awarded to the lowest scorers among the students, faculty, alumni, and fraternity teams. Clown trophies will also be presented to the highest scorers among the students and the faculty.
More than 35 members of the law school have registered for the nine-hole tournament.
Following the golf tournament and a sensitive ensemble player. be the dance at the Elks club.
In addition to concert work he has 607 ^kview avenue, at 9 p.m.
Prizes will be given at the dance, made recordings and done motion La Veme Boyer and ^ orchestra
I will play.
After a performance in Australia The Law School day, a tradition
in the School of Law, was renewed last year after an absence of several years.
Crown has been commended for his work both as a brilliant soloist
KEN KRUGER’
. . accepts gavel
the Sydney Morning Herald wrote . . For sheer brilliance and command of the instrument, this was the best piece of piano playing Sydney has heard since Artur Ru-
ISC Names Grid Winner
Sharp Minor, Schumann; and "Valse Oubliee” and Sixth Hungarian Rhapsody, Liszt.
Admission to the concert is free.
Members of the School of Music concert course and holders of the $5 concert books will be admitted early, and doors will open to the public at 8:15.
Crown is holder of the diploma up honors were shared by of the International Competition Adams and J. R. Smith.
Student council
Ball and Chain Elects Kruger
Ken Kruger was elected presi-1 dent of Ball and Chain, honorary j junior-senior athletic managers or- j ganization, Tuesday evening.
Other officers elected were Bob Grisson, vice-president; Bill Rowley, secretary; and Jim Bowen, treasurer.
Kruger, a senior, has taken part in many activities on campua. He | has been a Squire, Architectural Mrs. Edwarda White, counselor vice-president. Ball and Chain vice-
Secretaries Plan Lunch
of women, will be the honored guest of Sigma Alpha Sigma, secretarial administration sorority, at
prssident, and currently is a member of the Knights.
Independent
football contest winner of last a luncheon today in the Univer -week tfas Bob Holtzman. Runner- ! sity Commons dining rooms B and
C. J. C from 12 to 1.
The luncheon is under the
for Pianists, which was held in Vi- The $5 merchandise order at the auspices of Mrs. Ruth Toothaker. enna. He received the award in Student Union bookstore will be j “All secretarial administration 1933; it had never before been awarded to Holtzman at the IFC and business education majors are bestowed on an American pianist, meeting at noon today, 418 Student j invited,” said Dorothy Fucci, vice-He studied at Hock’s conserva- ! Union. president of the Organization.
Croup Considers Trolios Protests; No Action Taken
If payment is not forthcoming, students’ grades will be withheld until the fines are taken care of, he said.
Senior Class President Stan Tomlinson moved that the fine* be suspended on the grounds that the “freshmen didn’t know what they were doing.”
Token Fines Senator Bradley said that the fines are only a token of the authority of the investigating committee to regulate campaign procedure and that no assessment was more than 55.
Fines were levied for poster violations, illegal parades, failure to turn in financial reports, and late financial reports. A candidate was also cited for violation of articles 4 and 7 of the elections code.
Earlier Elections Commissioner Jim Schuck proposed that in coming freshman elections an election assembly be held and that the period of voting during election days be cut from seven to five hours.
Put It In Writing Bradley, concluding his report, urged that reports of campaign expenditures be submitted on a standardized form and that copies of campaign rules be attached to petitions for offices.
The Senate ratified the election of Fred Moldenhauer as Freshman class president and Sydne Moore as vice-president. Moldenhauer took his place as a voting senator.
Larry Spector, Greater University committee chairman, reported that an SC athletic blanket will be [ presented to Owen R. Bird, a per-i ennial Trooan rooter, who coined the nickname “Trojans” when working as a sportswriter on the Los Angeles Times in 1912.
Health Plan Duplicate Spector reported his committee's rejection of a proposed health plan for SC students on the grounds that it duplicated the present health service program.
Other plans on the fire with Greater-U include investigation of a new humor magazine, distribution of next year’s student handbook.
No action regarding protests investigating of cheating and pro-
oinef ollarrorl ’ Q/*tc in ______*
Chemistry, Dental Buildings To Be Completed by Spring
Squires to Reset Card Holders
Anderson to Give Near East Talk
Headlines” coffee hour series.
The series explores current events in various parts of the globe. Discussions regarding the South American and domestic scenes are 'planned for future meetings.
The series will be held in Hillel house. 1029 West S6t.h street.
Winners of the Loveliest Lux Girl contest will be presented tonight by Mona Freeman. Paramount star, at an invitational dinner at the Town House at 6:30.
All 17 contestants will attend the dinner wearing corsages prepared by Ad-Mont Florists, one of the merchants cooperating in the contest. The three winners also will receive special floral arrangements.
Besides receiving other prizes, the three winners also will be honored guests of the Hollywood stars appearing on the Lux Radio Theater program next Monday night.
Various members of the faculty and officials at Paramount studio also, have been invited to the dinner . Photographers and reporters from metropolitan newspapers will cover the event.
Lux wrappers were counted by the Los Angeles Shrine organization which will donate its fee to
Construction of the new chemistry and School of Dentistry buildings, part of SC's expansion program will reach completion by Dec. 1 and early spring C. Raim-Dr. Totton Anderson, associate | ond Johnson, university architect, professor of political science, will j said yesterday.
1 speak at 12:15 today on “Power j -phe two-story organic chemistry Tu! ™ . P’m’ Politics in the Near East’’ as Part °* teaching and research building
^ ...... the Hmel foundation>s “Behind the wm f^nt on West 36th place. Half
of the 12,000 square foot structure is being equipped at present.
Science Extension An extension of the north wing of Science hall, connected to the Science building between the first and second floors, this building will provide improved conditions for student chemists.
These improvements will include | hoods and sinks located next to j the working space of the student, permanent mounting stands for | the purpose of setting up experiments (these will replace the ring stands which are now being used), and 18 research and instructional laboratories.
The first floor will contain four laboratories—three large ones for undergraduates and one for advanced students. A preparation
room will be adjacent to the lat- ! will line the north side of the ter. For storage, there will be a chemistry building, stock room for chemicals and ap- The School of Dentistry build-paratus. i ing on the northwest corner of
More Labs Hoover and 34th streets is half-
Fourteen laboratories and four completed, faculty offices, a research room, a
against alleged “off-color ’ acts in list Thursday's Trolios show has been taken by the student activities committee, it was announced yesterday.
The committee met yesterday afternoon and considered possible action. Several students concerned with the production, a combined
posals for an “honor system,' possible class counqil exchanges between SC and UCLA, and improved high school day and frosh orientation program^.
‘Fight On’ For Decca The move to record SC songpt was given added support by the Senate. Vick Knight, LAS council
student and professional variety | president, moved approval of the show, met with the committee bat original proposal by Paul Parrisb
no names were given out.
‘ We have taken no action regarding Trolios as yet,” said Bernard L. Hyink, dean of students.
Judges All Set to Come Clean ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ ★ Name Lux Girl Winners Tonight
micro-analytical laboratory, and two rooms for special research apparatus will be on the second floor. A hydrogeneration house, where inflammable gas may be handled safely under pressure greater than 1000 pounds, will be located on the roof of the building. Experiments here will be directed by remote control behind the protection of extra thick walls.
Adequate lighting will be provided by solid rows of windows which | of 400 students,
54- Spanish Records
Moves Uptown
The present home of the year-old School of Dentistry,, the , largest in the West, is located at | Q FeatUTe Meet 16th and Los Angeles streets in
metropolitan Los Angeles, where it Spanish records will be played was established in 1914. at today s La Tertulia Pan-Ameri-
The ground floor of the new cana meeting at 3:30 in the Inter-$1,155,000 structure will provide national student lounge, more space than the present en- j The recordings are from the tire three-story downtown clinic1 collection of Mrs. Helen Sanz of building. There will be sufficient the Spanish department, facilities to take care of the needs Interested students are welcome.
Refreshments will be served.
and Jim Eddy that the Trojan Band record a record or album ox records.
Jack Crawford amended the motion, adding that the profits derived from the sale of the records should go toward sending the band east with the football team.
The Senate okayed a resolution that cases of vandalism at UCLA by SC students be dealt with by the Men's or Women's Judicial court.
Recognition was given to th« Zoology club as an .approved campus organization. Darleen Farrell presented the motion for the Student Organizations committee 21 the absence of Gene Royer.
LAS Panel Discusses Science and Politics
n
MONA FREEMAN . . . crowns queen
their new Crippled Children's hospital in Los Angeles which is nearing completion.
Allen A. Arthur. Lever Brothers campus representative for the campaign, said Lever Brothers company considered the campaign highly successful.
El Rodeo
Portraits
Seniors may now make appointments to have pictures taken for the El Rodeo next week (Nov. 19 through 21).
Delta Sigma Delta. Xi Psi Phi, Alpha Omega, and Psi Omega, should make appointments to have their pictures taken on Saturday, Nov. 1".
by Sandy Bothman
Scientific technology and its relation to political democracy was the LAS lecture pansl subject discussed yesterday afternoon in Doheny Library auditorium by Dr. room and balance and instrument Sidney W. Benson, professor of
! chemistry; Dr. Harry J. Deuel, dean of the Graduate School; and Dr. Leon A. Henkin, professor of mathematics.
Dr. Benson, using the aspect of governmental control and scientific research, illustrated that there can be technological progress under other conditions than freedom, but freedom has a proportional influence on the rate and fertility of scientific development.
Science and Food Dr. Deuel presented the results
CraduateStudents Faculty to Meet For Java Session
Today's edition of the graduate school's weekly coffee hour will feature coffee, donuts, and plenty of conver sation at 3 in the second-floor dining room of the Commons.
The social get-togethers, fast becoming an established institution [ that scientific technology has hr.d after its initial success last year, are held for the purpose of creat- of food, in the improvement of ing closer relations among gradu- health standards, and how these ate students and between students ! go together to strengthen democ-and faculty. ! racy.
This afternoon's affair will be Dr. Henkin illustrated historically sponsored by the department of how scientific technology has helped biochemistry. A different group to foster and hinder democratic sponsors the coffee hour each week. ^ improvement.
“Science is neither a source of j governmental influence on science, good nor evil. The moral balance | he pointed out that before the last of science can be calculated only | war there was an important psy-at great risk.” he said. I choiogical motivation for men to
Dr. Henkin said. “Perhaps we 1 go into science. Instead of money, could use scientific investigation to it offered great intellectual activity test the moral values of science.’’ and freedom to explore truth 1 0f stopping scientific research and On the asset side of the scien- : wherever the scientist might find it. being content with what we have, tific ledger, he showed that science He sr.id that today therfe is a or Benson pointed out that a very has given us more time to indulge serious problem because certain serious problem would result with in political activity, thus giving us governmental restrictions are thu idea, a broader base of informed citi- ' shackling the freedom of science, zens. Science has helped the rise which could result in elimination to nationalism by making it pos- some day there may
be no more. Science may develop
ter communication and transpor tation for more efficient central ized governmental control.
Science Defects
by a few geniuses, and if the number of men who go into research decreases, “there is a probability that scientific process will die of
Some of the defects of science \ inner sterility, have been the increasing govern-
in providing abundance and quality menta) control necessary to cope
with the large industrial organizations, national rivalry for raw goods and markets, and an immense standardization which can
a solution—certainly legislation won’t,” he said.
Food Improvements Russian Control Dr Deuel showed how improve-
He said thr.t in Russia, the Po- ments in the food productivity, by litburo is the final authority that scientific technology, has improved sanctions scientific theories. They I our democracy. This has been done have accepted Lycenko s genetic tjy improving strains of crops, de-
.. .. th'oruy and proW““d/11 "T”? i velopmg lertiliz»rs. and invention*
be seen through the displacement j which is not in accordance with it.
of small newspapers by the largely “They have banned the theory of mechanical farm equipment. We circulated dailies. of relativity which is essential in also 1156 fo°d preservatives to pro-
In Dr. Benson’s talk on t h e nuclear physics, and if earned to j tect what food we teivA,